What i want to know is why it twists forward.
This can only happen if the the mounting point is behind the center of pressure for the wing airfoils.
Any detail shots of this wing out there?
This. From page 1.volarchico wrote:And then throw in a bit of flexy-wing and that's the full story!Raptor22 wrote:We're seeing the effect of a car not running rear springs. The rear suspension is much more supple than the fronts so the cars tend to roll on their rear axles, cocking the inside front wheel and the inside front wing span.
Bridge the gap means touch, not approach. Most bridges are quite useless if they are a metre or two short.vall wrote:read my post above. The regulations say (sorry for the repeat):
So, no part of the car must close the gap to the ground (not with respect to the reference plane, the ground) but this is exactly what the flexy wing does - moves closer to the groundAny device or construction that is designed to bridge the gap between the sprung part of the car and the ground is prohibited under all circumstances.
Twists forward?ringo wrote:What i want to know is why it twists forward.
This can only happen if the the mounting point is behind the center of pressure for the wing airfoils.
horse wrote:I am really starting to believe that this is a failure of the regulations rather than Red Bull. As everything is in relation to the reference plane then as long as the car has enough rake and the wing does not touch the ground then it is within the regulations, as far as I see it. As Ciro said, it passes the regulations on flexibility.
Plainly the reference plane is defined badly with no relation to the actual physical ground. However, I think Red Bull are in breach of the spirit of the rules with relation to the central section of the wing, which is not supposed to be down force generating, but surely on the Red Bull (given it's angle of attack) it is. I think if the nose/pillars are moving to emphasise this effect then it should be stopped.
P.S. If she's carrying so much rake then her centre of pressure is likely to be different from the other vehicles.
vall wrote:read my post above. The regulations say (sorry for the repeat):horse wrote:I am really starting to believe that this is a failure of the regulations rather than Red Bull. As everything is in relation to the reference plane then as long as the car has enough rake and the wing does not touch the ground then it is within the regulations, as far as I see it. As Ciro said, it passes the regulations on flexibility.
Plainly the reference plane is defined badly with no relation to the actual physical ground. However, I think Red Bull are in breach of the spirit of the rules with relation to the central section of the wing, which is not supposed to be down force generating, but surely on the Red Bull (given it's angle of attack) it is. I think if the nose/pillars are moving to emphasise this effect then it should be stopped.
P.S. If she's carrying so much rake then her centre of pressure is likely to be different from the other vehicles.
So, no part of the car must close the gap to the ground (not with respect to the reference plane, the ground) but this is exactly what the flexy wing does - moves closer to the groundAny device or construction that is designed to bridge the gap between the sprung part of the car and the ground is prohibited under all circumstances.
3.17.1 Bodywork may deflect no more than 20mm vertically when a 1000N load is applied vertically to it 800mm
forward of the front wheel centre line and 795mm from the car centre line. The load will be applied in a
downward direction using a 50mm diameter ram to the centre of area of an adapter measuring 300mm x
150mm, the 300mm length having been positioned parallel to the car centre line. Teams must supply the
adapter when such a test is deemed necessary.
Ringo - that is a classic torsional behaviour, The rotation appears to move forward but it is an optical illusion. The shear centre will move back and down under vertical and horiz load, but the rotation makes it appear that the section is leaning into the direction of the applied force.ringo wrote:What i want to know is why it twists forward.
This can only happen if the the mounting point is behind the center of pressure for the wing airfoils.
There is an allowance.flynfrog wrote: You can't build and finitely stiff beam. This is why they mandate the force test.
Twisting forward confused me. The wing is moving back like a pendulum fixed at the nose cone. As the leading edge of the wing is in front of the "rod" of the pendulum it moves towards the floor as the wing moves back. The wing must be moved by its drag. The force generated by the wing is not all "down", similar to the rear wing flap, and the induced drag is moving it back.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote: the front wing is twisting forwards making the leading edge of the wing appear lower.
I think they might have a different philosophy to fixing the centre of pressure like we are now seeing with Renault and Torro Rosso. The rake of the car is likely to move the centre of pressure forward as the suction peak at the leading edge of the floor will be greater than if the floor were level to the ground. Similarly the front wing must move the centre of pressure forward too. You'd think there would be a point where there is too much front/middle downforce, especially with mandatory weight distribution, but not for them, it seems.richard_leeds wrote: That infers the floor is more tolerant of varied rake than the others?
JETJohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:@ Dragonfly
An absolute pointless post. Fanboys?
All of those parts are flexing on every car on the grid that is my point. You are saying that redbull is legall but not because you dont like it. This is an F1 techincal fourm. Why dont we discuss the mechanics possilbe layups ect that allow for this. They are passing all tests its a legal wing IMO..I dont agree with the working of the rule. A movable areo device would be like the DRS system.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:flynfrog wrote: There is an allowance.
The wing itself appears legal, by law. But it doesnt excuse the fact that something is flexing on the car. Wing mounts, nose, a combination of both in addition to a 2cm wing flex take your pick.
THE WHOLE technical problem in F1 is to obtain the maximum performance HONORING the rules...so, as far as F1 is concerned, the technical side and the legal side cannot be separated from each other.Dragonfly wrote:JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:@ Dragonfly
the fact that this is absolutely off topic, ergo even more pointless than mine.
I follow this forum with the expectation to learn something new, or discuss and ask technical questions.
The legal side is too complicated, too confusing and no one of us knows all the additional non-public clarifications and interpretations. But I am sick of word twisting and adjusting of their meaning to the liking of fan X, whose favorite team didn't quite manage to be smart and therefore plays the old game of accusing the other of cheating.
I've been working for 17 years with PhotoShop and the likes, and I can make you a bunch of animated GIF's, which will prove nothing at the end.
And? So what? So when are you going to do to catch this? Are you going to run out on track with your 1000N measuring apparatus while the car is moving?vall wrote:I disagree with the above. The regulations, among other things, say:
I don't see how this could only be valid during scrutineering before and after the race. The FW bridges that gap, or at least there is good evidence to suspect so, to the ground under circumstance of the car running on trackCode: Select all
Any device or construction that is designed to bridge the gap between the sprung part of the car and the ground is prohibited under all circumstances.
And? Have done. It was also done to death last year as well. Nothing conclusive as to what exactly is happening, as I'd said.see the comparison between the Ferrari and RBR.......or some other pictures in this tread
Prove that they're flexing beyond 2cm with your keenly trained eye then. Unless you can measure what you can see you're going nowhere. You can't switch the tables round so that you come from a default position of being right. Any kind of engineering just doesn't work that way I'm afraid.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Do you deny then that wings are flexing, beyond the permissable?
Unless you can measure that then you're going nowhere, and you can quote rules and regulations until you're blue in the face. It won't make the Red Bull front wing magically fail the tests and unless you can come up with something else then I fail to see where you're going with this or what you want people to do with it.A fancy wing it may be, but moving while the car is in motion it is too.